Rail budget to be presented in the parliament: report
Rail finance bill will include pointers on the recent rail fares
Mumbai: India's new government will next week roll out plans to overhaul its sprawling rail network, dubbed the "lifeline of the nation", which analysts say needs hundreds of billions of dollars of investment. Two days before Prime Minister Narendra Modi's new administration presents its first budget, a separate rail finance bill will be presented in the parliament on Tuesday following a controversial recent fares hike.
The country's railway system is one of the biggest in the world, stretching from the foothills of the Himalayas to the southern beaches. But observers say it has been neglected by successive governments over the past three decades of rapid economic growth during which car ownership has surged and low-cost airlines have mushroomed.
"I'm very glad the government is addressing the chronic logistics problem," said Arvind Mahajan, an infrastructure specialist at KPMG. "It has a lot of work to cover." Still the main form of long-distance travel for most of India's 120 crore population, around 2.3 crore people travel by train every day.
But some services are booked up for weeks in advance and overcrowding, especially in lower-class carriages which lack air-conditioning - means rail travel is often a miserable experience. The network has a dreadful safety record with a government report in 2012 putting the number of deaths each year at nearly 15,000.
Many are killed falling off overcrowded trains or crossing the tracks. Others are charred to death while perched on coach roofs as high-voltage electricity courses through overhead wires. As for freight, endemic delays make it sometimes impossible for businesses to predict when their goods will arrive.
Under the previous centre-left coalition, the main governing Congress party was happy to leave the railways ministry in the hands of a junior partner which showed little inclination to push reforms.
While fares remained low, the ministry's losses grew ever higher and it was hemorrhaging some $150 million or Rs. 900 crore ($1 = Rs. 60) a month by the time Modi's right-wing Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) trounced Congress in May's general election. In a speech last month outlining the government's priorities, President Pranab Mukerjee said "modernisation and revamping of railways is on top of the infrastructure agenda".
Echoing similar pledges in the BJP manifesto, the speech included promises to improve safety, expand services in the remote northeast and build a network of freight corridors for farm produce.